Download - Decision Letter - Denver DA
Second Judicial District 303 West Colfax Avenue, Suite 1300, Denver, Colorado 80204
Phone (720) 913-9000 Email: [email protected]
Decision Letter October 30, 2001
Contact: Lynn Kimbrough, 720-913-9025
Gerald Whitman
Chief of Police
Denver Police Department
1331 Cherokee Street
Denver, CO 80204
RE: Investigation of the shooting death of
Richard V. Dutson, Jr., 6-24-62, in which
Denver Police Sergeant Vince Lombardi, 89-31,
Officer Joseph Duncan, 95-92, Officer Rop
Monthathong, 95-103, Officer Todd Roumph,
95-105, Officer Michael Ryan, 97-20, Officer
John Schledwicz, 95-54, and Officer Charles
Wingard, 99-43 fired their weapons, on July 6,
2001, at 135 Park Avenue West, Denver,
Colorado.
Dear Chief Whitman:
The investigation and legal analysis of the shooting death of Richard V. Dutson, Jr., have been
completed, and I conclude that under applicable Colorado law no criminal charges are fileable
against the involved officers. My decision, based on criminal-law standards, does not limit
administrative action by the Denver Police Department where non-criminal issues can be
reviewed and addressed, or civil actions where less-stringent laws, rules, and legal levels of
proof apply. A description of the procedure used in the investigation of this shooting by a peace
officer and the applicable Colorado law is attached to this letter. The complete file of the
investigation will be open to the public at our office, and any interested party is welcome to
review the investigation and my decision in greater detail.
SYNOPSIS
Denver Police Officers responded to a radio simulcast of a "carjacking"1 in downtown Denver at
approximately 1:00 a.m., on Friday, July 6, 2001. The victim and witnesses reported a
description of the car. Uniformed Denver Police Officers responded immediately and a
downtown motorcycle officer observed a car matching the description of the suspect vehicle in
the 1400 block of Larimer Street. He and a uniformed patrol officer, driving a marked police car,
pulled in behind the car, which was stopped at the light at the intersection of Larimer and 14th
Streets. The car turned left onto 14th
Street; the marked patrol car pulled in behind it and the
officer turned on his emergency overhead lights and siren. The suspect vehicle stopped in a
parking lot at the northwest corner of Lawrence and 14th
Streets. As the officers watched, a
female party was forced out of the vehicle. A man slid in behind the wheel and the car
accelerated rapidly out of the parking lot, narrowly missing another motorcycle officer who was
entering the lot from another driveway. The suspect vehicle drove to 15th
Street, turned left on
15th
Street and proceeded to Wazee Street with two marked patrol cars in pursuit. At Wazee
Street, the suspect vehicle turned right, pulled over to the curb, and the driver turned off the
lights. The first pursuit car drove past the "blacked-out" car. The second patrol car, driven by
Denver Police Officer Charles Wingard, 99-43, pulled in behind the suspect vehicle. The driver
of the suspect vehicle put his car in reverse, backed into Wingard’s patrol car, and then drove
forward. He did not turn his headlights on.
The suspect vehicle drove at a high rate of speed "outbound" on Wazee Street to 20th
Street,
turned right on 20th
Street and continued eastbound. The pursuing officers estimated that at times
the suspect vehicle approached speeds of 80 mph, and drove with no regard for traffic signals,
other vehicles, or pedestrians. Twentieth Street is a two-way street for several blocks, but near
Arapahoe Street it becomes a one-way street with only westbound traffic permitted. The suspect
vehicle proceeded the "wrong way" on 20th
Street. At this point, pursuing officers concluded that
further pursuit was too dangerous and terminated the pursuit.
Among the officers who responded to the area of the pursuit was Sergeant Vince Lombardi, 89-
31. In fact, he had been driving west on 20th
Street when the suspect vehicle passed him going
the other direction. At approximately 1:14 a.m., Sergeant Lombardi located the suspect vehicle
in a parking lot at 135 Park Avenue West. He then saw the suspect, later identified as Richard V.
Dutson, Jr., 6-24-62, hiding between some other cars in the parking lot. Upon being spotted,
Dutson ran to the lobby of the apartment building at 135 Park Avenue West. He was able to pass
through the outer-lobby doors, but the inner-lobby doors were locked. He then turned and
reversed his tracks, running past Sergeant Lombardi. Sergeant Lombardi advised the police
dispatcher that he was in a foot chase with the suspect. This call resulted in other officers
responding "Code 10" (with overhead lights and siren activated). As Dutson approached the
street, he veered to his left and ran to his car.2 When Sergeant Lombardi arrived at 135 Park
Avenue West, he parked his police car, a marked 4-wheel drive Durango, directly behind
Dutson’s vehicle. Dutson started his vehicle and accelerated backwards, smashing into the side
of the Durango. Numerous other officers were arriving as these events transpired. Dutson had
turned so that his car was now pointing out toward Park Avenue West. His car was now to the
left of and facing in the opposite direction of Sergeant Lombardi’s Durango. Officers were
positioned behind and to the right side of the Durango. A police car that had stopped in front of
and facing Dutson’s vehicle was blocking his path to the street. Officers were positioned to the
right and left sides of this police car. To Dutson’s right were several unoccupied cars parked in
the building’s parking lot. There were no police officers and no cars behind Dutson.3
Officers repeatedly shouted commands for Dutson to turn off the engine and to get out of the car.
Rather than complying, Dutson intentionally drove forward toward officers and a patrol car that
provided cover for them. Dutson forcefully rammed into the front "push- bumper" of the patrol
car, which blocked his path to Park Avenue West. Officers in Dutson’s path fired their service
pistols at him. Dutson then put his car in reverse and backed up a short distance. There was a
short pause, during which several officers continued to issue loud verbal commands to Dutson to
stop and get out of his car. At least one officer started to approach the passenger side of Dutson’s
car. Again, instead of complying with the repeated commands, Dutson "gunned" the engine and,
again, drove forward. Several officers now fired their service pistols. Dutson’s vehicle came to a
stop and officers saw him slump to the passenger side of the vehicle. Officers made a cautious
approach to Dutson’s car. He was removed, placed in custody and, almost immediately, placed in
an ambulance and rushed to Denver Health Medical Center. He was pronounced dead at the
hospital at 1:39 a.m., July 6, 2001.
STATEMENT OF INVESTIGATION
This investigation involves the shooting death of Richard V. Dutson, Jr., by uniformed Denver
Police Officers. Officers responded to a "carjacking" in lower downtown and Dutson was
observed in the suspect vehicle almost immediately after police arrived. He then led police on a
high-speed chase through lower downtown. The chase was terminated because of the risk to
officers and uninvolved citizens. However, shortly thereafter, Dutson’s vehicle was found and he
was located hiding nearby. Several officers were involved in the initial pursuit and additional
officers were involved in the confrontation at 135 Park Avenue West. At that location, Dutson
drove his car directly toward at least two Denver Police Officers, and struck two marked Denver
police cars in the process. Numerous verbal commands were issued to Dutson before shots were
fired, ordering him to turn off his car and get out of his car. Dutson never demonstrated any
intent to comply with police orders. Seven Denver police officers discharged their weapons at
Dutson: Sergeant Vince Lombardi, 89-31, Officer Joseph Duncan, 95-92, Officer Rop
Monthathong, 95-103, Officer Todd Roumph, 95-105, Officer Michael Ryan, 97-20, Officer
John Schledwicz, 95-54, and Officer Charles Wingard, 99-43.
Immediately after the shots were fired, a Metro-Swat Officer approached the vehicle and made a
preliminary determination that Dutson no longer presented a threat. Other officers then went to
the passenger side of the vehicle and removed Dutson from the vehicle. An ambulance was
requested at approximately 1:15 a.m. and Dutson was immediately transported to Denver Health
Medical Center. Despite the efforts of the medical staff, Dutson succumbed to his wounds and
was pronounced dead at 1:39 a.m. All of the officers involved in the pursuit and in the
confrontation at 135 Park Avenue West were dressed in blue Denver Police Department
uniforms. Denver Police marked patrol cars and police motorcycle units were involved in the
initial attempt to stop Dutson and the pursuit that followed. All of the vehicles were equipped
with full emergency equipment and were marked with blue Denver Police badge emblems on the
sides of the vehicles; elsewhere on the vehicles were other police insignia. The Durango driven
by Sergeant Lombardi, that was used to block Dutson’s vehicle in the parking lot at 135 Park
Avenue West, was equipped with an overhead light bar, other emergency lights, and was marked
with blue Denver Police badge emblems on the sides of the vehicle. Each of the officers who
fired a weapon was armed with a Denver Police-authorized handgun and each weapon was
loaded with Denver Police-issued ammunition. Following the incident, and in compliance with
the protocols established for officer-involved shootings, each officer’s handgun was secured by
Denver Police Crime Lab personnel for appropriate testing.
The following is a chart that details the weapon carried by each officer, the magazine capacity of
that weapon, the number of shell casings recovered and identified to the weapon, and the number
of shots fired by the officer based on the unloading sheet:
Officer Weapon Ammunition
Capacity Shell Casings
( recovered and
identified )
Shots Fired4
(per unloading
sheet)
Sgt. Vince Lombardi 89-31
.45 Sig Sauer,
model P220 Magazine: 7
Chamber: 1
4
6
Officer Joseph Duncan 95-92
.45 Colt Magazine: 8
Chamber: 1
5
7
Officer Rop Monthathong 95-103
9mm Glock,
model 17 Magazine: 19
Chamber: 1
3
5
Officer Todd Roumph 95-105
9mm Sig
Sauer,
model P226
Magazine: 15
Chamber: 1
8
12
Officer Michael Ryan 97-20
.45 Glock,
model 21 Magazine: 13
Chamber: 1
4
4
Officer John Schledwicz 95-54
.45 Glock,
model 21 Magazine: 13
Chamber: 1
13
155
Officer Charles Wingard 99-43
.45 Glock,
model 21 Magazine: 13
Chamber: 1
2
2
On July 6, 2001, Dr. Amy Martin, a forensic pathologist with the Denver Medical Examiner’s
office, performed an autopsy on Dutson’s body. The cause of death was determined to be
multiple gunshot wounds. Dr. Martin noted evidence of sixteen bullet wounds, but observed that
one of the entry wounds, a wound to the left side of the chest, "actually appears to represent the
entry of two bullets." Two separate wound tracks were noted; each emanating from a single
"defect" on the skin, and two slugs or projectiles were recovered. It thus appears that Dutson was
struck by seventeen bullets. Dr. Martin’s report indicates that she found one bullet wound to the
left side of the head, which caused a skull fracture and a graze wound to the brain. She found
another bullet wound at the right lower neck, just above the clavicle. Dr. Martin also determined
that Dutson received five gunshot wounds to the chest and thorax and suffered trauma to both
lungs and to the area around his heart. Additional penetrating wounds were found on his right
bicep, right upper arm, left upper arm and left ring finger. Dr. Martin found two graze wounds,
one at the top and back of the left shoulder, the other in the area "just behind and below"
Dutson’s left armpit. Dr. Martin also noted evidence of medical intervention including an
orotracheal tube, a thorocotomy incision, a chest tube, and EKG (electrocardiogram) leads.
Toxicological analyses of blood and urine samples obtained from Dutson’s body were positive
for the presence of cocaine and a cocaine metabolite known as benzoylecgonine. The cocaine
level established at 509 nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml); the benzoylecgonine was determined to
be 4,308 nanograms per milliliter.6
At autopsy, Dr. Martin recovered fourteen spent bullets from Dutson’s body. Another slug was
recovered during therapeutic efforts at the emergency room. These items were turned over to the
Denver Police Department’s crime laboratory for analysis. Crime scene investigators processed
the scene at 135 Park Avenue West and the stolen Ford Taurus driven by Dutson. One live 9mm
cartridge and six spent bullets were located in the area around the vehicles. One spent bullet was
recovered from the driver’s door of Sergeant Lombardi’s Durango. Eighteen bullets and a
number of bullet fragments were recovered from the Ford Taurus. Twenty-nine .45 caliber shell
casings and twelve 9mm shell casings were recovered from the location. All of these items were
taken to the Denver police department’s crime laboratory for testing and analysis by firearms
examiners. With the exception of those bullets and bullet fragments that were too damaged for
comparison purposes, examiners identified all of the recovered bullets and shell casings to the
weapons fired by the seven officers identified in this letter.
Dutson was driving a stolen maroon 2000 Ford Taurus. After the initial crime scene
documentation was completed, the car was towed to the Denver Police Department’s Traffic
Operations Bureau garage so that investigators could pursue additional examination in a secured
location. A temporary Colorado license plate was displayed in the rear window. By researching
the vehicle identification number, investigators discovered that the Taurus had been the subject
of a stolen vehicle report taken by the Arvada Police Department on June 29, 2001 (Arvada P.D.
case # 01-17753). Investigators also determined that the temporary license plate found on the
vehicle was not that assigned to the car by the Colorado Department of Motor Vehicles. The
permanent Colorado license that was assigned to the car, C663BNM, was not found in the
Taurus. A search of the Taurus resulted in the recovery of three syringes, two syringe caps, and
one syringe plunger, items consistent with drug paraphernalia and illicit drug use. Trace evidence
found in the syringes was tested and found to be positive for Cocaine. Also found on two of the
syringes was "chemical indication of blood." Forensic scientists were able to obtain DNA results
from one of the syringes. The DNA profile of that result matched the DNA profile of a post
mortem blood sample taken from Dutson’s body.
Because of the protracted and somewhat complicated nature of the incident, it may be of
assistance to consider the events in three segments: the initial theft, the pursuit through lower-
downtown Denver, and the confrontation at 135 Park Avenue West. Several citizens saw the
initial "purse snatch." Written statements were obtained from these witnesses; video statements
were obtained from Sarah Lohrman, 5-18-77, the victim of the theft, and Cheri Mills, 3-14-70, a
woman who was in the car with Dutson when he first grabbed the purse and who Dutson forced
out of the car at 14th
and Lawrence Streets.
The witnesses to the pursuit of the suspect vehicle through downtown Denver were all members
of the Denver Police department. Those who were later involved in the actual shooting incident
provided video-taped statements; the others provided written statements detailing their
observations and actions. Following the shooting incident, officers and detectives completed a
neighborhood canvass to locate witnesses. Over fifty potential witnesses were contacted, over
forty of whom advised investigators that they had heard sounds of gunfire and many of whom
also stated that they had heard the sounds of a car crash and the sounds of voices before they
heard gunshots. Investigators obtained written statements from each of these individuals.7 Six
individuals, Michael Briscoe, 12-23-46, Michael Dawson, 7-8-55, Charlie Harrison, 3-23-55,
Scott Hill, 8-8-53, Cheri McCreary, 11-8-44, and Jeannthaen Phoenix, 4-14-65, told police that
they had seen various aspects of the actual shooting incident. Written and video-taped statements
were obtained from these witnesses.
As noted previously, seven officers discharged their weapons. Each of these officers was
separated at the scene and then transported to Denver police headquarters. Each officer was
given an opportunity to speak with an attorney and each officer, thereafter, voluntarily provided
a video-taped statement regarding his role in the incident. Two other officers, Sergeant John
MacDonald, 86-68, and Officer Bret Starnes, 99-04, were witness to at least some of the actual
shooting incident. Each of these officers also voluntarily provided a video-taped statements.
Based on the scores of witness statements and the review of the physical evidence, most of the
facts can be established beyond dispute. While there are generally some variations in the witness
accounts when there are so many witnesses, a fairly clear picture of the events emerges. The
following is a composite presentation of the facts.
The incident began behind Blue 67, a nightclub in the "LoDo" section of Denver near the corner
of 15th
and Lawrence Streets. In the early morning hours of July 6, 2001, Sarah Lohrman was
socializing with friends at the club. There is a plaza behind the club near the alley between
Lawrence and Larimer Streets, which features a fountain and some areas where people may sit
and relax. Lohrman had gone out to the fountain to place a telephone call to her mother. While
she was speaking on the phone, a male approached her and asked her for a cigarette. She gave
him a cigarette and noted that he seemed somewhat strange. She also noted that, after he begged
the cigarette, he remained in the area, pacing back and forth in a manner that she thought unusual
and disquieting. Lohrman then heard and felt the same man approaching her rapidly. He grabbed
her purse, which she had placed beside her while she was on the telephone, and ran to what
Lorhman described as a red car similar to a Mercury Sable. This car, she noted, was parked in
the alley with the trunk up. Lohrman chased the man to the car and reached in the open driver’s
window in an effort to regain her purse.8 The driver, whom she described as a white male
between 35 and 40 years old, began to drive forward, dragging her a short distance. Lohrman fell
to the ground, but was not injured. (Lohrman also noted that there was a woman seated in the
car.) Lohrman told her mother what had occurred and her mother told her to call 911,
immediately. A friend of Lohrman’s, Brian Freuck, 1/1/72, was sitting in the courtyard patio bar
of Blue 67 when he heard Lohrman scream. He told investigators that he first ran to the street
corner where he saw a red sedan speeding away with "a person who stole [Lohrman’s] purse."
Freuck then went to Lohrman and used her phone to call 911. Denver Police computer-aided
dispatch (CAD) records reflect that the initial call was made at 1:03 a.m. The CAD record
describes the call as a "carjacking in progress." [Emphasis supplied.]
Freuck went back to the street, where he saw a police officer on a motorcycle. He told the officer
what had occurred, describing the suspect vehicle as a red Taurus or Sable. In his written
statement, Freuck states that the officer asked "is that the car?," apparently directing his attention
to a vehicle. Freuck stated that he positively identified the suspect vehicle and the officers began
to pursue the vehicle.
One of the first officers on the scene was Denver Police Officer Bret Starnes, 99-04. Starnes
monitored the police dispatch of a carjack in progress and then saw a car matching the
description of the suspect vehicle at the corner of 14th
and Larimer Streets. Starnes advised the
dispatcher that he had the car at 14th
and Larimer Streets. There was a marked patrol car next to
Starnes and Starnes communicated to that officer that he should initiate the stop, as the patrol
car’s emergency lights were more visible. The patrol officer did so and the suspect vehicle turned
onto 14th
Street and stopped in a parking lot at the northeast corner of 14th
and Lawrence Streets.
Other officers responded to this location, including Officer Rop Monthathong, 95-103, riding a
DPD marked motorcycle, and Officer Charles Wingard, 99-43, driving a marked patrol car.
Matthew Newton, 4-15-72, a bystander in the area, saw a red sedan enter the parking lot "at the
same time that police were arriving in response to a 911 call in regards to a purse snatching. A
woman jumped out of the car and the car sped away with the door still open with police in
immediate pursuit." The officers attempting to stop the vehicle also saw a female either jump or
get pushed out of the car. Starnes told investigators that, in the parking lot, he saw a black female
being forced or pushed out of the driver’s side door and saw another party move from the
passenger’s side to the driver’s side of the car. (It was Starnes’s belief, at this time, that the
female party was the victim of the carjacking.) Starnes was able to see the new driver whom he
described as a white male with light colored, possibly gray, hair. The driver was later identified
as Dutson. Monthathong told investigators that, upon his arrival, he saw a woman ejected from
the car, but that he was unable to determine whether she jumped or had been pushed. Upon his
arrival, Wingard saw the suspect vehicle being stopped by a patrol car and a police motorcycle.
He was preparing to assist in a "felony [high risk] stop," when he saw a black female get out of
the car and then saw the car take off at a high rate of speed.9
With officers in pursuit, Dutson drove to 15th
Street and made a left turn onto that street.
Wingard, initially the second car, told investigators that Dutson drove down 15th
Street and
turned right on Wazee Street. He saw the first patrol car turn "right behind" Dutson’s car, but
when he came around the corner, he saw
"the car parked with its lights out, blacked out right there, right past the sidewalk. The first
[police] car had [driven] past it. I pulled up immediately right behind the car with my lights and
everything on. The … I didn’t see anybody inside the car. Then a guy popped up, put [the] car in
reverse, slammed into my vehicle on [the] push bumpers and drove off toward, continued down
Wazee toward 20th
Street. I was unable to get on the radio at that point when he did that. He
turned on 20th
Street from Wazee towards Larimer . . . Lawrence. I was finally able to get on the
radio and said I was behind the car. . . . The vehicle was accelerating. I got up to probably about
60, 65 miles an hour prior to hitting Arapahoe Street. Arapahoe then turned into a one way.10
There was one car that appeared to be turning onto Arapahoe. The [suspect] vehicle went around
that car, continued the wrong way down 20th
Street. That’s when I got on the radio and told ‘em I
was backing off, I was not going to follow him any longer. He was probably in excess of 80
miles an hour, probably, and he was still accelerating close to a hundred in my opinion."
Other officers also ceased pursuit. One of those officers was Sergeant Lombardi. Lombardi had
been near 20th
Street when the initial "simulcast" was aired. He was "outbound" on 20th
Street as
Wingard followed Dutson from Wazee Street to 20th
Street, and he saw Dutson driving toward
him at a high rate of speed with one officer in pursuit. Lombardi later stated that the suspect
vehicle drove toward him and that he was forced to take evasive action. He turned around, but
the vehicles were moving so fast that he did not believe he would be able to catch up. He
estimated that Dutson was driving in excess of 60 mph. When he made the determination that he
would be unable to catch up to Dutson, Sergeant Lombardi turned off his emergency equipment
and saw other officers taking the same steps, effectively terminating the pursuit. At 1:11 a.m.,
officers advised the police dispatcher that they were no longer in pursuit.
Although the chase had been terminated, a number of officers remained in the area to check the
streets, alleys, and parking lots for the suspect. Sergeant Lombardi was engaged in this activity
when he saw what he later described as possible skid marks leading into a parking lot at 135 Park
Avenue West. He drove into the lot and saw a car that matched the description of the suspect
vehicle. He parked his Durango behind the suspect vehicle, got out, checked the hood, and found
that it was warm to the touch. At that time, he saw a white male "pop" up between the cars.
Sergeant Lombardi yelled at him, "hey! Come here!" Dutson, instead, ran in the opposite
direction to the lobby of the building at 135 Park Avenue West. There are double doors leading
into the lobby – the first set was open, but the second set was locked. Sergeant Lombardi gave
chase, approached Dutson at gunpoint and yelled, "Stop! Police!" He also advised the dispatcher
that he was contacting the suspect. Dutson ignored Lombardi’s commands and, as he was unable
to enter the building, reversed his direction and ran past Sergeant Lombardi.
Several citizens saw this initial contact by Sergeant Lombardi. In a written statement, Jacqueline
Smith stated that at approximately "1:15 a.m., a tall gentleman ran into the front entrance by the
tenant intercom [and] kick[ed the] front door. He started banging on the front door. The
gentleman ran back outside. I don’t know where he went after that." A similar statement was
obtained from James Fields, 1-24-49. Ms. Mary Parrish, 5-25-31, and Ms, Bassett, 2-16-59,
provided brief written statements in which they advised that they were downstairs at 135 Park
Avenue West talking together when they heard an individual pounding on the front door.
According to Bassett, "a few minutes later" they heard gunshots.
Mr. Michael Briscoe, 12-23-46, told investigators that the sound of screeching tires drew his
attention to the street. He looked out of the bedroom window of his second floor apartment and
"saw a tall thin guy walk up to the entrance of the building. Then a police officer came up to him
and yelled for him to get on the ground. The guy hesitated for a moment and then began to run
away from the building and across the parking lot. The officer was chasing him. It was dark and
just as they got around my old pick-up truck I heard shots. Then I heard a crash and a bunch
more shots."
CAD records reflect that Lombardi advised the dispatcher that he had a "party running toward
Park Avenue" at 1:14 a.m. Because of the nature of this call and the nature of the investigation,
other cars searching in the area, responded "Code 10," some arriving in less than a minute.
Dutson ran to his car, got behind the wheel, started the engine and backed directly into the side
of Sergeant Lombardi’s Durango police vehicle, striking it near the driver’s side door. Sergeant
Lombardi had followed Dutson back to this part of the parking lot and taken a position behind
and to the left of his Durango. Wingard was within one or two blocks when Sergeant Lombardi
aired that he had a party running. He arrived within seconds and parked his police car left of and
to the rear of Sergeant Lombardi’s police car. As he arrived, he saw Dutson back out of a parking
space, later telling investigators that "he slammed into the sergeant’s car. He did this probably
about two or three times."
A number of residents heard the impact. Indeed, the impact was such that investigators later
removed some pieces of Dutson’s car from the area between the driver’s door and the left-rear
door of the Durango. In his video-taped statement, Michael Dawson, 5-8-55, told investigators
that from his seventh floor apartment he heard the sound of tires squealing and then heard what
sounded to him like a car crash. He went to his window overlooking the parking lot. A tree in the
lot blocked his view of the actual incident, but he was able to see one police car with its overhead
lights activated. He then heard an officer shouting commands, among them "show your hands!
Get your hands up! Get out – get on the ground." Dawson stated that although the officers yelled
commands for some time, in his opinion, "somebody just wasn’t listening."
In a written statement, another building resident, Mary Lynn Snyder, 9-3-39, provided the
following information:
"[I was in] bed, heard car thud and another car thud, screeches. . . . [I] looked out window, police
cars and other car cornered in driveway in front of building. [I] heard a single shot, then another
shot and heard police say "get out of car, get out of car." Then a bunch of shots. POLICE WERE
SHOOTING INTO CAR." [Emphasis supplied by witness.]
From his apartment on the 13th
floor, Charlie Lee Harrison also heard the sound of a crash. He,
too, looked out the window. In his written statement, Harrison stated that he saw
"Maybe 5 or [6] cops run up behind the Durango police cruiser – more like in front of it. There
was some behind, but that was later. About the next 15 seconds there was screaming: "Put your
hands up! Get out of the car!" I forgot to tell you something. When I first got up, I saw the car
trying to go back and forth up against the police cars. So 15 seconds past [sic], then the firing
started – about 5 to 6 seconds, rapid fire. It sounded like firing but I didn’t see fire coming from
the barrels. Then it stopped [and for] about 5 seconds they said, "Put your hands up! Get out of
the car." Then they started firing again."11
(Harrison also provided a video-taped statement in
which he provided greater detail regarding his observations)
The noises and shouting heard by the witnesses were those of the officers responding to cover
Sergeant Lombardi. Starnes and Monthathong arrived almost immediately after Wingard. Starnes
parked his motorcycle on the street and saw Wingard park next to the Durango. He was getting
off of his motorcycle when he heard one shot. He ran to the left side of Wingard’s patrol car
where he heard "Lombardi and other officers commanding Dutson to ‘shut the car off! Get out of
the car! Stop the car!’" Monthathong told investigators that, as he arrived, he heard someone
yelling "Hands! Hands! Show me your hands!" Monthathong saw officers standing near the
suspect vehicle with their weapons drawn. He ran to that location and drew his weapon.
Starnes had taken a position just behind and to one side of Sergeant Lombardi. He saw Dutson
back into the Durango and observed that the red car driven by Dutson was the same vehicle he
had attempted to stop at 14th
and Larimer Streets. After Dutson backed into the Durango, Starnes
saw him drive directly at Wingard’s patrol car. Starnes stated that Sergeant Lombardi continued
to issue commands to "stop the car." Starnes now saw two other officers standing next to the
other patrol car, in the parking spaces. Starnes told investigators that both he and Sergeant
Lombardi had their pistols drawn. They were within 15 feet of the suspect and Starnes could see
the suspect’s eyes, which he described as "huge." While they were in the area behind the
Durango, Sergeant Lombardi came into Starnes’s line of fire. Accordingly, Starnes lowered his
own pistol. At about the same time, he heard Sergeant Lombardi fire his pistol. He believed that
Lombardi fired three times. There was a pause of a "couple" of seconds and then Starnes heard
gunshots from both his right and his left. He was unable to say who was actually firing at this
time. Starnes estimated that between ten and twenty shots were fired. As Starnes’s described it,
Sergeant Lombardi fired the first shots and the vehicle continued to move forward. There was a
brief pause and then a second barrage of shots. Starnes believed that the suspect was driving
toward the officers standing to his left and he feared for their safety.
Sergeant Lombardi’s description of Dutson’s flight from the apartment building is consistent
with those of the other witnesses. When Dutson ran to his car, Sergeant Lombardi saw another
police car pull up and to the left of his Durango. Sergeant Lombardi circled behind that car and
took a position behind his vehicle and to the right of the other police car. Sergeant Lombardi told
investigators that Dutson got into his vehicle and backed up, striking Sergeant Lombardi’s
Durango. Dutson then pulled slightly forward, turning the wheel so that his car was now facing
out toward Park Avenue West. Dutson then drove forward into the police car by which Lombardi
was standing. Lombardi, believing that Dutson was trying to hit him, fired his pistol at Dutson.
He told investigators that he fired one shot and that he believed that he had hit Dutson. Lombardi
recalled yelling commands at the suspect to surrender. From his vantage point, it appeared that
Dutson had slumped or ducked down and remained down for about 15 seconds. During this time
Sergeant Lombardi and the other officers continually repeated their commands. Dutson then sat
up or, as Sergeant Lombardi described it, "popped" up. Dutson put his car in reverse and backed
up a short distance. Sergeant Lombardi was able to see the suspect’s face and told investigators
that Dutson "had a total look of determination on his face."12
Sergeant Lombardi told
investigators that Dutson then gunned his car forward again. Lombardi fired his weapon at least
two or three times. He also heard several other officers fire their guns. He estimated that between
15 and 20 rounds had been fired.
Monthathong and Wingard were already present and the other involved officers were arriving
when Sergeant Lombardi fired the first shot. Schledwicz parked his patrol car in the median area
of Park Avenue West. As he got out of his car, he heard one gunshot. He saw Wingard stop in
the parking lot and he ran over to Wingard’s patrol car and took a position near the left front
fender of that car. Roumph estimated that he arrived within 30 seconds of Sergeant Lombardi’s
dispatch that he was in a foot chase. Roumph parked his car "almost directly in front of the
building" and, as he got out of his car, he heard gunshots. He estimated that he was about 20 to
25 feet from the shooting location and he rushed to that location and took a position just to
Schledwitz’s right. Roumph told investigators that it appeared to him that Schledwitz was in a
position to the "far left" but that because of the parked cars they were unable to move any farther
left. They were, thus, "sorta in the path of the vehicle." He stated that it "appeared obvious to me
that, that the party was trying to make a getaway and I pulled my sidearm from my holster and
trained on the suspect that was still behind the wheel of the vehicle and still had control of the
vehicle."
Duncan and Ryan, were working together; Duncan was driving. They stopped forty to fifty feet
away from the parking lot and, as they arrived, Duncan turned off the emergency equipment.
Duncan told investigators that as they started to get out, he "heard a shot and told [his] partner ‘it
sounds like they’re shooting.’ I started running and then I hear some more, so it’s like the first
shot and then, I don’t know, five or six more, maybe." Duncan stated that he saw the Durango,
another patrol car and Dutson’s car. He ran to Sergeant Lombard’s left so that he was to the "left
front" of Dutson’s car and drew his service pistol.
Ryan, also heard the gunshot and he advised the dispatcher that shots were being fired. He saw
Duncan go to Sergeant Lombardi’s left side. He later stated:
"I began to go around to the, uh, to almost like a right flank area where there wasn’t [sic] any
other officers over there. [Dutson’s] vehicle was still, it was still running, it was still moving. I
could hear officers yelling "stop!" I heard somebody yell, "Show me your hands!" I had actually
gone to the front of the Durango and, as I looked across, I could see . . . I believe it was Officer
Wingard standing across, uhm, in the direct line of fire, so I didn’t feel comfortable where I was
at, so I actually moved back towards the center of [Lombardi’s] Durango. "
Ryan was now standing on the passenger side of the Durango by the window. The windows of
that vehicle were open and Ryan had a clear view of Dutson’s profile. Ryan saw that Dutson had
his "hands on the wheel, lookin’ straight ahead, looking extremely agitated, he was very
focused." The bullet strikes to the Durango, the bullet recovered from the Durango, and the fact
that Dutson was hit on his left side by some bullets confirm Ryan’s description of his position at
the time he fired.
Wingard was the officer who Ryan was concerned about when he first moved to the front of the
Durango. When Wingard first arrived, he got out of his car and drew his pistol in preparation for
making a "felony stop." He heard Sergeant Lombardi yelling at Dutson to "stop the car!" and he,
too, began yelling similar commands. Wingard told investigators that he heard Lombardi say
"mace the vehicle." He thereupon moved away from the side of his car and started to approach
Dutson. He told investigators that he approached
"passenger’s side of the car, and the . . .both windows are rolled up. That’s when the guy ducked
down, up under, towards the, uh, passenger’s seat. He reached, reachin’ down toward the
passenger seat. I ducked down onto one knee. I didn’t know what he . . . I couldn’t see him at
that point. I jus’ ducked down on one knee. And then . . . right after that I heard the first
gunshot."13
It is apparent from a review of all of the witnesses’ statements and those of the involved officers
that, after the first shot or shots were fired, Dutson was still in command of his vehicle. After the
first shots were fired, Dutson backed his car up a few feet. Officers began, again, ordering him to
turn off his engine and get out of the vehicle. While there is no way of knowing how long this
pause lasted, it is clear that commands were repeated a number of times. What is also clear is
that, after this interval, Dutson accelerated rapidly, driving directly toward Park Avenue West
and directly toward one police car and several police officers. All of the involved officers fired
their weapons in this second volley. Dutson finally slumped down and to his right. At this point,
the officers determined that the threat had ended and ceased firing.
The ambient lighting in the area was provided by street lights and lights from the building.
Additional lighting was provided by the police cars that had responded and had headlights and
spotlights trained on Dutson’s vehicle. The officers could clearly see Dutson in the car and
Roumph, Ryan, and Sergeant Lombardi each would later remark, separately, on the expressions
they observed on Dutson’s face in that pause after the first shots were fired and before he drove
forward again, one last time, toward the officers and the patrol car. Roumph said, "he got this
determined look on his face and he just, you know, punched the accelerator again, trying to uh,
go, uh push up between the two police vehicles. Lombardi described Dutson as having a "total
look of determination." As noted above, Ryan stated that he looked "extremely agitated, he was
very focused." Regardless of what perspective each officer had, what is apparent from a review
of all of the statements is that Dutson never indicated any intent to surrender or to comply with
the commands of uniformed police officers. In short, Dutson gave every sign of an individual
who was intent upon making an escape regardless who was injured or jeopardized. This was the
nature of the threat faced by the officers who responded to cover Sergeant Lombardi in his effort
to apprehend Dutson.
LEGAL ANALYSIS
Criminal liability is established in Colorado only if it is proved beyond a reasonable doubt that
someone has committed all of the elements of an offense defined by Colorado statute, and it is
proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense was committed without any statutorily-
recognized justification or excuse. While knowingly or intentionally shooting and killing another
human being is generally prohibited as homicide in Colorado, the Criminal Code specifies
certain circumstances in which the use of deadly physical force is justified. Because the evidence
establishes in this case that the officers shot Dutson, the determination whether their conduct was
criminal is primarily a question of legal justification.
Section 18-1-707(2) of the Colorado Revised Statutes defines the circumstances under which a
peace officer can use deadly physical force in Colorado. In pertinent part, the statute reads as
follows:
1. A peace officer is justified in using deadly physical force upon another person …
only when he reasonably believes that it is necessary:
a. To defend himself or a third person from what he reasonably believes to
be the use or imminent use of deadly physical force; or
b. To effect the arrest or to prevent the escape from custody of a person
whom he reasonably believes:
i. Has committed or attempted to commit a felony involving the use
or threatened use of a deadly weapon; or
ii. Is attempting to escape by the use of a deadly weapon
Section 18-1-901(2)(e) of the Colorado Revised Statutes defines the term "Deadly Weapon" as
follows:
(2)(e) "Deadly Weapon" means any of the following which in the manner it is used or
intended to be used is capable of producing death or serious bodily injury: (I) A firearm,
whether loaded or unloaded; (II) A knife; (III) A bludgeon; or (IV) Any other weapon, device,
instrument, material, or substance, whether animate or inanimate.
Also pertinent to the facts and circumstances of this case is Section 18-3-202 (1)(e), Assault in
the first degree, of the Colorado Revised Statutes, which reads as follows:
1. A person commits the crime of assault in the first degree if:
(e) With intent to cause serious bodily injury upon the person of a peace officer or firefighter, he
or she threatens with a deadly weapon a peace officer or firefighter engaged in the performance
of his or her duties, and the offender knows or reasonably should know that the victim is a peace
officer or firefighter acting in the performance of his or her duties.
In reference to the pertinent section of the "Assault in the first degree" statute in which the victim
is a peace officer, in People v. Prante, 177 Colo. 243, 493 P.2d 1083 (1972), the Colorado
Supreme Court stated:
"The General Assembly recognizes that peace officers are placed in a position of great risk and
responsibility, so to invoke a special punishment for an assault upon a peace officer acting in the
scope of his official duties is neither arbitrary, capricious, nor unreasonable."
Therefore, the question presented in this case is whether, at the instant the officers fired the shots
that caused Dutson’s death, they reasonably believed that Dutson was or was about to direct
deadly physical force against one or more of them or was attempting to escape by the use of a
deadly weapon. In order to establish criminal responsibility for an officer knowingly or
intentionally causing the death of another, the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
the officer doing the shooting either did not really believe in the existence of these requisite
circumstances, or, if he did hold such belief, that belief was, in light of all available facts,
unreasonable.
CONCLUSION
Based on the totality of the facts developed in this investigation, as summarized in this letter,
there is no reasonable likelihood of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that any of the involved
officers committed any criminal act. Therefore, I conclude that under applicable Colorado law no
criminal charges are fileable against any of the seven officers who fired shots at Richard V.
Dutson, Jr. Because this shooting involved a significant number of shots being fired by the
involved officers, I will discuss related matters in more detail. There were numerous
opportunities for Dutson to peacefully surrender, but he chose not to.
From the moment Dutson snatched Ms. Lohrman’s purse throughout the entire incident until the
last shot was fired, Dutson never once exhibited any intent to comply with the lawful orders of
the police and their efforts to apprehend him without incident. Instead, there was a continuous
escalation by Dutson of criminal and behavioral misconduct that increased the threat he posed to
the officers and the public.
Dutson was high on cocaine and driving a stolen vehicle. He stole the purse of a young woman.
Then, as she attempted to get her purse back, he dragged her a short distance with his car until
she fell to the pavement. He forced a woman he had met that evening, who was in his car, to
assist him in his getaway. He eventually pushed this woman from the car. Officers initially
believed this was a "carjacking." He fled recklessly at a high rate of speed, with his lights out,
narrowly missing a motorcycle officer. After additional pursuit, he intentionally backed into the
police car of an officer who was attempting to apprehend him. The police pursued him until he
drove the wrong way down a one-way street, creating a universal threat to all citizens and
officers in the area. After eluding the police, when they called off the pursuit, he attempted to
enter a secured apartment building, posing a threat to the residents inside. When confronted at
gunpoint, he refused to surrender. He again escaped the pursuing officer and got back into his
car. Repeated commands by the officers to Dutson were ignored: "Turn off the engine! Show me
your hands! Get out of the car! Get on the ground! Stop the car!" Instead, Dutson intentionally
and aggressively rammed backward into one police car, then drove at another police car and the
officers who were using it for cover. When this attack occurred, shots were fired at Dutson.
Dutson then backed up the car. The shooting stopped. An officer attempted to approach Dutson’s
car in an effort to end the confrontation. Again, rather than comply with the officers’ commands
and surrender, Dutson gunned the engine and drove at the police car and officers again. The
officers fired another volley of shots. Dutson finally leaned to the right and slumped to the seat.
An officer approached the car with caution and determined it was safe to extract Dutson from the
car.
During the final confrontation of this lengthy string of events, officers first used a "show of
force" by the presence of a number of officers, by the use of strong verbal commands, and by
drawing their weapons. Responding with a "show of force" is a tactical effort to gain compliance
and avoid having to actually "use" the force. Dutson’s steadfast refusal to comply and surrender,
even when confronted with this "show of force," is further indication of the serious threat he
posed.
During the final frames of this life-threatening confrontation, Dutson’s conduct turned from just
using the car as a mode of transportation in his efforts to escape, to using the vehicle as a deadly
weapon in an effort to escape at all cost, including causing potential serious injury or death to the
officers’ attempting to lawfully apprehend him. Dutson’s threatening behavior became an armed
attack when he closed distance on the officers by accelerating toward them with his stolen car.
Using his stolen car as a deadly weapon, the intensity of his attack increased in both speed and
force. His car was a blunt trauma weapon in the manner it was being used. A car cannot only
move at great speed, but also with great destructive power. It is a formidable object to stop. You
do not stop a car by shooting at it. In fact, Denver Police Department policy prohibits that action.
If justified to use deadly physical force, you shoot at the person controlling the car. When one or
more officers are in close proximity to an assailant’s car, beginning and completing the attack
against those officers can occur almost simultaneously. This means the officers’ response time to
perceive the threat, evaluate the response, and take defensive action is severely compressed. The
officers must react quickly and with sufficient force to counter and repel the attack. Under the
circumstances of this case, retreating or withdrawing to a more defensible position is not
required by law, even if it were possible to do so, and may not be a proper tactic if it allows the
subject to escape the scene and pose a continuing serious threat to citizens and officers.
An individual who engages in conduct as outrageous, destructive, and threatening as Dutson did
here, both invites and ultimately forces a deadly force response by police officers. But there is
generally the lingering question: "Why?" Why, when confronted by numerous police officers
with their guns drawn and after repeated commands to stop and surrender, would he not comply?
Why, instead, would he drive at the officers, not once, but a second time after being shot at and
possibly already wounded the first time? It is not always possible to determine the motivation
behind the conduct in cases such as this, but in this case there is certainly credible evidence that
suggests this may have been what is often described as "suicide by cop." There is witness
indication that he may have intended to force officers to kill him rather than face the prospect of
going to prison for life as a habitual felony offender. His conduct in this case is consistent with
that possibility. Nevertheless, the justification of the officers’ self-defense response to Dutson’s
clearly life-threatening conduct stands independent of that issue.
If justified by an imminent threat to their life, officers are trained to shoot for "upper-body or
center-body mass." The goal is to stop the actions of the attacker and thereby stop the threat.
Officers may fire until they perceive and believe the threat is neutralized. This may take a single
shot or it may take scores of shots, depending on the circumstances of the case. When the suspect
is armed with a gun or knife, the threat is generally neutralized when the gun or knife is dropped
or the suspect either stops the attack or goes down and is rendered incapable of using the
weapon. In the case of an attack with a vehicle, which is being used as a deadly weapon, the
threat is generally neutralized when the suspect is no longer attempting to run someone down or
is rendered incapable of doing so. The use of a vehicle as a deadly weapon presents some
conditions that differ from a firearm or edged weapon attack. These conditions may have an
impact on the number of shots fired. The vehicle provides some degree of cover and the potential
to deflect shots. For example, in this case, even though at relatively close range, only 34% of the
shots fired by the seven officers struck Dutson. In a vehicle, the suspect is in a seated position,
which may mask the impact of the shots on the suspect, thereby delaying the officers’ perception
of when the threat is neutralized. A person who is standing or running may go down quickly
when struck by a bullet. It may be more difficult to assess the impact of the shots on a person
who is seated in a vehicle. A vehicle cannot be dropped or discarded by the suspect, as is the
case with a firearm or edged weapon. Consequently, the vehicle may continue to be perceived as
a threat and it may be difficult for the officers to quickly and precisely assess when the suspect
has been neutralized. In this case, the first volley of shots clearly did not neutralize Dutson, or
reduce the threat he posed.
The mere fact that seven officers fired, standing alone, increases the total number of shots. And,
the semi-automatic weapons used by these officers are capable of discharging multiple shots per
second. Finally, the fact that Dutson’s conduct drew two separate volleys of shots from the
officers increases the total number of shots fired. All of these factors and others may contribute
to more shots being fired in a case such as this than under other circumstances. As a practical
matter, the only individuals who know for certain whether each of the 50 shots fired in this case
was necessary are the officers who fired them. In this case, there is no bright-line or conclusive
indication they were not.
The high legal level of proof required under the law for a criminal prosecution can only control
police conduct at the very fringes of acceptability. The number of shots fired in this case or any
other case must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Where officers are justified at the inception
to use deadly physical force, the pivotal issue necessarily becomes whether they stopped firing
when they should have. The criminal law is generally not precise enough an instrument, except
under the most clear-cut circumstances, to sever one shot or some shots out from among many,
and establish beyond a reasonable doubt that that shot or those shots were unnecessary or
unreasonable. To the extent it is ever possible to do so, those determinations are generally left to
the administrative and civil arenas where different issues are addressed, and lower legal levels of
proof apply.
Cases such as this, where numerous shots are fired, focuses the attention of all officers on the
importance of ensuring that they use only the degree of force that is reasonable, necessary, and
appropriate under the circumstances to protect the public and themselves. In the thousands of
contacts between citizens and officers in Denver each year, the officers themselves are in the best
position to control the proper use of force. While criminal prosecution, administrative discipline,
and civil penalties may have some impact on controlling police conduct, as a practical matter, the
individual and collective professionalism of the officers is the key. The officers themselves are
clearly in the best position to know the degree of force that is necessary in a given situation and
when to stop. To the extent they minimize the use of force while still accomplishing their lawful
purpose, the reputation of the Department and the trust and confidence the public has in the
Department will rise.
Equally as important in minimizing the use of force in our community is the conduct of every
citizen. To provide the best quality of life in our community, the police need our help and
cooperation. Officers receive a great deal of training in areas associated with the use of force.
Citizens can also benefit from training in this area. I will use the term citizen in this discussion,
although these comments apply more directly to offenders and assailants. In the overwhelming
majority of cases where force is used, the officer is responding to the non-compliant conduct of
the citizen. Citizens have a responsibility not to place officers in the position of having to use
force.
This case is yet another example of the devastating negative impact substance abuse and
addiction can have on the life of an individual and on those who encounter him when he is in the
grips of the addiction. While Richard Dutson may well have been an entirely different person
when not under the influence of drugs, that is not the person the citizen victims and officers
encountered on July 6, 2001. It is tragic that Richard Dutson by his conduct caused the officers
to take his life. It is also unfortunate that his parents, family, and friends, who knew him as a
different person in better times, have had this tragedy visited upon their lives. Unfortunately,
these officers encountered Richard Dutson at his worst. It is fortunate that none of the citizens or
police officers were seriously injured during the string of criminal acts committed by Richard
Dutson that ultimately led to his death. All of these individuals and their families and friends
have also been affected by this event. We expect a lot from our police officers, but we do not
expect them to be seriously injured or die doing their job. Richard Dutson was given multiple
opportunities over a lengthy period of time to avoid this result. Tragically, for reasons known
only to Richard Dutson, during the entire episode he never once showed any sign of compliance
or a desire for a peaceful conclusion. To the contrary, he seemed intent on forcing this result.
As in every case we handle, any interested party may seek judicial review of our decision under
C.R.S. 16-5-209.
Very truly yours
Bill Ritter, Jr.
District Attorney
cc: Sergeant Vince Lombardi
Officer Joseph Duncan
Officer Rop Monthathong
Officer Todd Roumph
Officer Michael Ryan
Officer John Schledwicz
Officer Charles Wingard, 99-43
David Bruno, Attorney at Law
Wellington Webb, Mayor
All City Council Members
Aristedes Zavaras, Manager of Safety
Dave Abrams, Deputy Chief
Mary Beth Klee, Deputy Chief
Dan O’Hayre, Division Chief
Armedia Gordon, Division Chief
Steve Cooper, Division Chief
Juan Maldonado, Division Chief
Tim Leary, Captain, Crimes Against Persons Bureau
Jon Priest, Lieutenant, Homicide
Joseph Delmonico, Homicide Detective
Joel Humphrey, Homicide Detective
John Weber, Captain
Chuck Lepley, First Assistant District Attorney
Lamar Sims, Chief Deputy District Attorney
Henry R. Reeve, General Counsel, Deputy District Attorney
Justice William Erickson, Chair, The Erickson Commission
Footnotes:
1. Although the actual crime which triggered the police response was a theft, the description of the incident as a
"carjacking" necessarily resulted in a response different in nature and degree from that which would,be occasioned
by a theft or "purse snatch." A number of the officers who responded told investigators that based upon their
experience, a "carjack" involved the taking of a vehicle at gunpoint with the further suggestion that the perpetrator
was likely to be both armed and desperate.
2. Although investigators later determined that Dutson was driving a stolen car, this fact was not known to officers
at the time. For the sake of simplicity, the suspect vehicle will generally be referred to as Dutson’s car or vehicle.
3. A not-to-scale diagram is attached to this letter
4. Based on the unloading sheet the total number of rounds fired by the seven officers adds up to 51. There were actually only 50 shots fired because one live round was recovered
at the scene.
5. Although the Denver Police Crime Laboratory unloading sheet indicates that the magazine capacity is 13 rounds and states that the officer advised the crime lab that he carries
the pistol with 13 live rounds, in his video-taped statement to investigators, Scheldwicz indicated that he carried the pistol with 13 rounds in the magazine and an additional round
in the chamber. He stated that he fired all of the rounds in the magazine, executed a "speed" reload and fired one round from the new magazine. If his recitation was accurate, he
would have fired 15 rounds.
6. Studies show that blood cocaine levels over 400 ng/ml are significant and consistent with behavioral changes by subjects ingesting the drug. See, e.g., Baselt, Disposition of
Toxic Drugs and Chemicals in Man, 5th ed., 2000.
7. Sometime after the incident, an uninvolved individual who had some information regarding his previous contacts with Dutson came forward. That information is discussed
below at footnote #12.
8. Mssrs. Sean Bennet and Andrew Diamond found the purse and contents shortly before 2:00 a.m. in the 1400 block Lawrence-Larimer alley. These gentlemen turned the items in
to a bartender at Blue 67.
9. The woman who the witnesses describe as being ejected from the suspect vehicle was Cheri Mills, 3/14/70. Ms. Mills provided investigators with a written statement, followed
by a video-taped statement. Essentially, Ms. Mills claimed that she had been out drinking when she met the suspect who introduced himself as "Rick." He offered her a ride home
and, while they were driving, he advised her that he needed to stop at a bar to "see someone." Thereafter, they
"returned to the same bar [as] he said he needed to pick up something. He got out of the car, opened the trunk [and] said he would be right back. . . . At that point, he went into the
bar. On the way back, he grabbed a lady’s purse, jumped in the car and drove off. He drove about 4 blocks and told me I was going to have to drive. I said, "no," but he told me I
had to drive from downtown. I said okay. I drove about 2 blocks [and] that’s when a police car got behind us. I turned the corner [and] that’s when the cop car signaled me to pull
over so I did. When I stopped the car, he reached across me, opened my door and pushed me out of the car and drove off.
10. Wingard probably meant to indicate that 20th Street becomes a one-way street.
11. A number of other witnesses in the neighborhood heard either the sound of the vehicles impacting, the officers issuing commands, or both. These observations are reflected in
the statements of Jefferson Collins, Jr., (no date of birth given); Ola Chapman, 3-27-39; Dennis Harris; 5-3-60, Cheri McCreary, 11-8-44, Jeannthaen Phoneiz, 4-14-65, Francis
Roetzel, 1-5-39, Jeffrey Shook, 7-28-55, and Christine Thomas, 3-14-61,. Those who heard commands are in general agreement that they heard people yelling commands before
they heard the gunshots.
12. A number of the officers remarked on the fact that Dutson had a clear escape path and, instead, apparently chose to drive forward toward the officers. A communication and
affidavit received by DPD homicide investigators from Mr. William O’ Rourke, dated July 9, 2001, may shed some light on Dutson’s state of mind. Mr. O’Rourke stated that he
had been Dutson’s "12 step" sponsor during the period January, 1998, through March of 1999. Paragraph number five of Mr. O’Rourke’s affidavit includes the following
statements, here reprinted verbatim:
a. Rick [Dutson] had a long arrest record and was twice convicted on felony charges.
b. Rick [Dutson] was scared to death at the prospect of another felony conviction, which would result in an indeterminate to life sentence
c. Rick [Dutson] was sure that if he ever relapsed again, he would immediately turn to crime to support his habit.
d. Rick [Dutson] was adamant that he would never allow the authorities to arrest him again and that he would make sure that they killed him rather than
arrest him and face the prospect of life imprisonment.
e. On several occasions, Rick [Dutson] repeated his conviction to (have the authorities) end his life rather than face the prospects of life imprisonment.
13. Monthathong told investigators that when he heard the first shot, he ran to the officers standing by Wingard’s patrol car. He saw Dutson in the driver’s seat and stated "I
couldn’t figure out what he was doing but when I saw him, he was leaning down, reaching for something or doing something next to him down there.